This IS Scary: Is your domain safe from predatory lawsuits?
You have big hopes of being an online superstar and bigger
dreams of making your fortune doing what you love and helping
people.
You buy your $5.99 domain and devote several weeks to crafting
your marketing message and putting all the pieces together so it
all works to pull in orders like clockwork, day in, day out.
You also put your domain out there in a big way, doing
everything by the book to get viral traffic, search engines, pay
per click, articles, affiliates all promoting your site...
Because you know the work you do once puts your domain out there
and draws floods of people to your site for years to come.
Then one e-mail comes threatening to take it all away in a
heartbeat.
Followed by the certified letter, notifying you that a litigious
bully will take over your domain, unless you cough up $1,150
just so the National Arbitration Forum will hear your side of
the case, stating why your domain should continue to be yours!
"What!" you exclaim. "You mean people can take away my domain,
that I registered and paid for? How can that happen?"
Well, when you "bought" your domain, in the fine print you
probably didn't read, you agreed to allow an administrative
panel determine the fate of everything you've put into your web
presence, if someone with deep pockets decided to squash you.
And if you're like most people online, having to throw away
$1,150 just to be heard by the one-person panel deciding your
fate truly is a scary thought... just for the opportunity to
protect everything you have, you've got to come up with what for
most people amounts to their mortgage payment or two months rent.
And that just buys you a seat at the table, and doesn't do a
thing toward protecting you or defending against this unwanted
attack on your livelihood.
For that you're probably best off relying on an attorney
specializing in Internet law, and you can imagine how much
additional mint that would cost.
Trick or treat, without the treat!
How do I know all these things, you ask?
Because the domain I bought to promote my teachings based on the
original version of "Think and Grow Rich",
ThinkAndGrowRichSeminars.com, is under such a legal attack.
Through that site I offer my "Rediscover Think and Grow Rich"
program to expose Napoleon Hill's teachings to a 20th Century
audience, enhancing the importance and value of his work and
life.
Yet the Napoleon Hill Foundation doesn't see things that way.
They consider my domain in direct competition to their own
sites, and accuse me of acting in bad faith to confuse people
that my materials are
from them or Napoleon Hill.
Of course we all know how far attorneys will go to argue their
point, and how "the truth" becomes irrelevant, or stretched at
least to the point of breaking, so the merits of the case don't
really matter.
The thing is that if someone decides they have a good reason to
challenge one of your domains, and they want it, they could cost
you a lot of time and cash, and seriously threaten what you've
took so long to build.
What can you do to limit or protect yourself?
1. Know your rights.
The policy you agreed to follow when you registered the domain
is posted at http://www.icann.org/udrp/udrp-policy-24oct99.html.
2. Don't put all your eggs in one domain.
More than likely any predators looking to challenge your
business will search the WHOIS database for keywords related to
their area of interest.
For example, they probably found thinkandgrowrichseminars.com by
searching thinkandgrowrich.
Yet maybe they wouldn't have found my domain if I had registered
SeminarsOnThinkAndGrowRich.com, instead.
And if I'd also registered ThinkAndGrowRichTalks and
TalksOnThinkAndGrowRich, I'd have additional options, even
though it'd take a lot of work to direct traffic to those sites,
instead of the one being threatened for hostile take-over.
3. Direct all your promotions through your personal domain.
If instead of ThinkAndGrowRichSeminars.com I'd directed everyone
to learn about "Rediscover Think and Grow Rich" and my other
related materials through DanKlatt.com, for example, this threat
would not matter so much to me.
4. Register keyword domains that look the same, yet aren't.
I could have registered ThinkAnGrowRich.com,
ThnkAndGrowRich.com, or thinkandgrownich.com and they probably
wouldn't have raised an eyebrow.
Notice from those examples that our eyes tend to fill in the
missing "i" and not notice anything unusual.
Keep these strategies in mind next time you go to register
another domain.
A little pre-emptive thought can potentially save you thousands
and protect your livelihood online!
Please forward this to others who may not have been aware of
this threat, which will only get worse as the domain pool
shrinks even more. About the Author
For important updates on Dan Klatt's domain challenge and also
to read "Napoleon Hill's Rolling in His Grave: How Coming from
the Old-Paradigm of Fear and Scarcity Is Bad Business" subscribe
to the "Consciousness of Wealth Newsletter" at
http://www.DanKlatt.com.
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